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Cricket stuff that doesn't deserve its own thread

SeamUp

International Coach
Often think who out of the SA players from isolation would have been sure 40-50+ test averages. I would say these 4 and Lee Irvine the almost certainties. Then debatable one's would have been Clive Rice, Henry Fotheringham and Kevin McKenzie but high 30s nonetheless. Procter maybe low -to-mid 30s like Shaun Pollock ?


Basil de Oliveira, Tony Greig & Kepler Wessels did average 40+. Lamb could have and should have ?
 
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Lillian Thomson

Hall of Fame Member
Lamb was high class and could have averaged mid 40’s. But on the other hand he shouldn’t have been playing for England at all and was 28 by the time he made his debut.
 

SeamUp

International Coach
Lamb was high class and could have averaged mid 40’s. But on the other hand he shouldn’t have been playing for England at all and was 28 by the time he made his debut.
Yeah. He was a maverick. A supreme talent. My dad had moved to Cape Town by early 70s and was playing in the club scene and he remembers many "senior" cricketers kicking up a fuss that he was picked whilst in school for Western Province. But what they didn't know was how good he was and then Peter Kirsten was same vintage (debuted a year later for WP).
 

SeamUp

International Coach
Just read Lamb's cricinfo Profile. Last sentence did make me chuckle.

Some England cricketers are born; there was no destiny in Allan Lamb's career. Signed from Western Province as an unknown by Northamptonshire as their overseas player in 1978, he was chugging along nicely when Ken Turner, their secretary, persuaded him that South Africa were years away from returning to Test cricket and that he should invoke his English-born parents to play for England. He never lost his accent nor his attitudes: there was always the hint of the colonial chancer about him -- but Lamb was to be a fixture of the England middle order for the next decade. Small, stocky, aggressive, he had a correct technique, power in his shots and a gift for needling the bowlers. Lamb captained England in three Tests, hopelessly, but in 1995 he came close to taking Northamptonshire to their first Championship, strutting round the county grounds like Napoleon.
 

Burgey

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The Craddock interview with Ian Meckiff on that Cricket Legends series is well worth a watch
 

TheJediBrah

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Lol remember when Andrew McDonald played Test cricket. A few weeks before that I was lapping him around the Maribyrnong and no one else would have recognised him.
 

cnerd123

likes this
Yea pretty shocking news. Still young and in relatively good health. Been in the public eye a lot recently. Hope he gets well soon.
 

Starfighter

Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
no starc or mcgrath?
McGrath only played 6 tests in the period. Starc has a low delivery for his height as he bends his torso over extremely far. I remember in the SL series last year the TV broadcast did a comparison between him and Richardson. Starc (197 cm) bowled from 212 cm and Richardson (178 cm) bowled from 205 IIRC.

They had an older article that seems to have vanished that showed Broad and Ishant have especially low deliveries for their height.
 
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Burgey

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So Haze has a very similar bowling profile to Flintofff? The latter seemed several clicks faster to me.

also, anyone read this today? Who’d have thought a Qld side led by Law and Maher would be a pack of *****?

 

Prince EWS

Global Moderator
So Haze has a very similar bowling profile to Flintofff? The latter seemed several clicks faster to me.

also, anyone read this today? Who’d have thought a Qld side led by Law and Maher would be a pack of ****s?

Flintoff's fastest spells were definitely faster but he took a lot out of himself bowling those. Chasing leather a lot more often than Haze probably resulted in some tired low-130s spells dragging his speeds down, not to mention how often he played with an absolutely rekt ankle.

The fact that they only started measuring in 2006 when his fast bowling peak was 2004-2005 probably contributes too.
 

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